The Times Australia
The Times World News

.

Oscar contender Poor Things is a film about disability. Why won’t more people say so?

  • Written by Louisa Smith, Senior lecturer, Deakin University

Readers are advised this article includes an offensive and outdated disability term in a quote from the film.

Poor Things[1] is a spectacular film that has garnered critical praise, scooped up awards and has 11 Oscar nominations[2]. That might be the problem. Audiences become absorbed in another world, so much so our usual frames of reference disappear.

There has been much discussion about the film’s feminist potential (or betrayal)[3]. What’s not being talked about in mainstream reviews is disability[4]. This seems strange when two of the film’s main characters are disabled.

Set in a fantasy version of Victorian London, unorthodox Dr Godwin Baxter (William Dafoe) finds the just-dead body of a heavily pregnant woman in the Thames River. In keeping with his menagerie of hybrid animals, Godwin removes the unborn baby’s brain and puts it into the skull of its mother, who becomes Bella Baxter (Emma Stone).

Read more: Poor Things: meet the radical Scottish visionary behind the new hit film[5]

Is Bella really disabled?

Stone has been praised for her ability to embody a small child who rapidly matures into a hypersexual person – one who has not had time to absorb the restrictive rules of gender or patriarchy.

But we also see a woman using her behaviour to express herself because she has complex communication barriers[6]. We see a woman who is highly sensitive and responsive to the sensory world around her. A woman moving through and seeing the world differently – just like the fish-eye lens used in many scenes.

Women like this exist and they have historically been confined[7], studied and monitored like Bella. When medical student Max McCandless (Ramy Youssef) first meets Bella, he offensively exclaims “what a very pretty retard!” before being told the truth and promptly declared her future husband.

Even if Bella is not coded as disabled through her movements, speech and behaviour, her onscreen creator and guardian is. Godwin Baxter has facial differences and other impairments which require assistive technology.

So ignoring disability as a theme of the film seems determined and overt. The absurd humour for which the film is being lauded is often at Bella’s “primitive”, “monstrous” or “damaged” actions: words which aren’t usually used to describe children, but have been used to describe disabled people throughout history[8].

In reviews, Bella’s walk and speech[9] are compared to characters like the Scarecrow[10] in The Wizard of Oz, rather than a disabled woman. So why the resistance?

‘She is an experiment. Her brain and her body are not quite synchronised.’

Read more: By naming 'Pennhurst', Stranger Things uses disability trauma for entertainment. Dark tourism and asylum tours do too[11]

Freak shows and displays

Disability studies scholar Rosemarie Gardland-Thomson writes[12] “the history of disabled people in the Western world is in part the history of being on display”.

In the 19th century, when Poor Things is set, “freak shows” featuring disabled people, Indigenous people[13] and others with bodily differences were extremely popular.

Doctors used freak shows to find specimens – like Joseph Merrick[14] (also known as the Elephant Man[15] and later depicted on screen) who was used for entertainment before he was exhibited in lecture halls. In the mid-1800s, as medicine became a profession, observing the disabled body shifted from a public spectacle to a private medical gaze[16] that labelled disability as “sick” and pathologised it.

Poor Things doesn’t just circle around these discourses of disability. Bella’s body is a medical experiment, kept locked away for the private viewing of male doctors who take notes about her every move in small pads. While there is something glorious, intimate and familiar about Bella’s discovery of her own sexual pleasure, she immediately recognises it as worth recording in the third person:

I’ve discovered something that I must share […] Bella discover happy when she want!

The film’s narrative arc ends with Bella herself training to be a doctor but one whose more visible disabilities have disappeared.

What does ‘disability coding’ mean? You see it in films including Forrest Gump and Poor Things.

Framing charity and sexual abuse

Even the film’s title is an expression often used to describe disabled people. The charity model of disability[17] sees disabled people as needing pity and support from others. Financial poverty is briefly shown at a far-off port in the film and Bella initially becomes a sex worker in Paris for money – but her more pressing concern is sexual pleasure.

Disabled women’s sexuality is usually seen as something that needs to be controlled[18]. It is frequently assumed disabled women are either hypersexual or de-gendered and sexually innocent[19].

In the real world disabled people experience much higher rates of abuse, including sexual assault, than others. Last year’s Royal Commission into Violence, Abuse, Neglect and Exploitation of People with Disability[20] found women with disability are nearly twice as likely as women without disability to have been assaulted. Almost a third of women with disability have experienced sexual assault[21] by the age of 15. Bella’s hypersexual curiosity appears to give her some layer of protection – but that portrayal denies the lived experience of many.

Watch but don’t ignore

Poor Things is a stunning film. But ignoring disability in the production ignores the ways in which the representation of disabled bodies play into deep and historical stereotypes about disabled people.

These representations continue to shape lives.

Read more: The shame and pleasure of masturbation: Poor Things gets girls’ early sexual feelings right[22]

References

  1. ^ Poor Things (www.imdb.com)
  2. ^ 11 Oscar nominations (www.oscars.org)
  3. ^ feminist potential (or betrayal) (www.theguardian.com)
  4. ^ disability (letterboxd.com)
  5. ^ Poor Things: meet the radical Scottish visionary behind the new hit film (theconversation.com)
  6. ^ complex communication barriers (theconversation.com)
  7. ^ confined (theconversation.com)
  8. ^ throughout history (press.uchicago.edu)
  9. ^ walk and speech (www.nytimes.com)
  10. ^ characters like the Scarecrow (www.theguardian.com)
  11. ^ By naming 'Pennhurst', Stranger Things uses disability trauma for entertainment. Dark tourism and asylum tours do too (theconversation.com)
  12. ^ Rosemarie Gardland-Thomson writes (ewspring2017.weebly.com)
  13. ^ Indigenous people (theconversation.com)
  14. ^ Joseph Merrick (www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov)
  15. ^ Elephant Man (www.imdb.com)
  16. ^ private medical gaze (www.academia.edu)
  17. ^ charity model of disability (www.yacvic.org.au)
  18. ^ be controlled (www.theguardian.com)
  19. ^ de-gendered and sexually innocent (www.tandfonline.com)
  20. ^ Royal Commission into Violence, Abuse, Neglect and Exploitation of People with Disability (disability.royalcommission.gov.au)
  21. ^ have experienced sexual assault (disability.royalcommission.gov.au)
  22. ^ The shame and pleasure of masturbation: Poor Things gets girls’ early sexual feelings right (theconversation.com)

Read more https://theconversation.com/oscar-contender-poor-things-is-a-film-about-disability-why-wont-more-people-say-so-224150

Times Magazine

DIY Is In: How Aussie Parents Are Redefining Birthday Parties

When planning his daughter’s birthday, Rich opted for a DIY approach, inspired by her love for drawing maps and giving clues. Their weekend tradition of hiding treats at home sparked the idea, and with a pirate ship playground already chosen as t...

When Touchscreens Turn Temperamental: What to Do Before You Panic

When your touchscreen starts acting up, ignoring taps, registering phantom touches, or freezing entirely, it can feel like your entire setup is falling apart. Before you rush to replace the device, it’s worth taking a deep breath and exploring what c...

Why Social Media Marketing Matters for Businesses in Australia

Today social media is a big part of daily life. All over Australia people use Facebook, Instagram, TikTok , LinkedIn and Twitter to stay connected, share updates and find new ideas. For businesses this means a great chance to reach new customers and...

Building an AI-First Culture in Your Company

AI isn't just something to think about anymore - it's becoming part of how we live and work, whether we like it or not. At the office, it definitely helps us move faster. But here's the thing: just using tools like ChatGPT or plugging AI into your wo...

Data Management Isn't Just About Tech—Here’s Why It’s a Human Problem Too

Photo by Kevin Kuby Manuel O. Diaz Jr.We live in a world drowning in data. Every click, swipe, medical scan, and financial transaction generates information, so much that managing it all has become one of the biggest challenges of our digital age. Bu...

Headless CMS in Digital Twins and 3D Product Experiences

Image by freepik As the metaverse becomes more advanced and accessible, it's clear that multiple sectors will use digital twins and 3D product experiences to visualize, connect, and streamline efforts better. A digital twin is a virtual replica of ...

The Times Features

Italian Street Kitchen: A Nation’s Favourite with Expansion News on Horizon

Successful chef brothers, Enrico and Giulio Marchese, weigh in on their day-to-day at Australian foodie favourite, Italian Street Kitchen - with plans for ‘ambitious expansion’ to ...

What to Expect During a Professional Termite Inspection

Keeping a home safe from termites isn't just about peace of mind—it’s a vital investment in the structure of your property. A professional termite inspection is your first line o...

Booty and the Beasts - The Podcast

Cult TV Show Back with Bite as a Riotous New Podcast  The show that scandalised, shocked and entertained audiences across the country, ‘Beauty and the Beast’, has returned in ...

A Guide to Determining the Right Time for a Switchboard Replacement

At the centre of every property’s electrical system is the switchboard – a component that doesn’t get much attention until problems arise. This essential unit directs electrici...

Après Skrew: Peanut Butter Whiskey Turns Australia’s Winter Parties Upside Down

This August, winter in Australia is about to get a lot nuttier. Skrewball Whiskey, the cult U.S. peanut butter whiskey that’s taken the world by storm, is bringing its bold brand o...

450 people queue for first taste of Pappa Flock’s crispy chicken as first restaurant opens in Queensland

Queenslanders turned out in flocks for the opening of Pappa Flock's first Queensland restaurant, with 450 people lining up to get their hands on the TikTok famous crispy crunchy ch...